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<text id=90TT3005>
<title>
Nov. 12, 1990: Plain Squeaking
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Nov. 12, 1990 Ready For War
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 38
Plain Squeaking
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Bush tries hard to "give 'em hell," but his harsh campaign
attacks on Democrats fail to boost his sagging credibility
</p>
<p>By DAN GOODGAME/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Michael
Duffy/Washington
</p>
<p> During the final throes of an otherwise forgettable midterm
campaign, Americans last week witnessed a strange spectacle:
George Bush, the celebrated conciliator and undistinguished
orator, tried--at least for a couple of days--to emulate
Harry ("Give 'Em Hell") Truman.
</p>
<p> Rallying Republicans in Oklahoma City, Bush blamed the
Democrat-controlled Congress for dragging the economy to the
edge of recession. He snarled that Congress had "turned its back
on our police officers." Later he boasted that Republicans had
"held the line against reckless cuts of our armed forces" sought
by Democrats, adding that "we owe that much to our men and women
in the Persian Gulf."
</p>
<p> It was a risky gambit for the normally cautious Bush, but,
as one White House official put it, "When you're this far
behind, you have to take some chances." Bush desperately needed
to regain the initiative following his flounder flops on taxes
during the budget talks, which drove his poll ratings down more
than 20 points and moved many G.O.P. candidates to split with
him publicly. Worst of all, Bush's credibility was slipping. In
an unpublished portion of a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal
poll, voters were asked "Is George Bush honest, a person you can
trust?" Only 52% said yes, down from 63% a year ago.
</p>
<p> Spurred by John Sununu, his combative chief of staff, Bush
sought to recover by appealing to voters over the heads of a
"do-nothing Congress," just as the Democrat Truman had done more
than four decades earlier. Jim Pinkerton, 32, the White House
policy-planning chief, had urged this strategy for months after
poring over accounts of Truman's 1948 campaign, in which he
pressed his social program, bashed Republican lawmakers for
obstructing it and convinced voters to replace them with
Democrats. This time, however, neither the actor nor the stage
seemed to fit the script. Voters, while disgusted by federal
fecklessness, blame Republicans at least as much as Democrats.
Also, as a senior Republican strategist conceded, "this
give-'em-hell stuff really isn't George Bush, and it's not
credible coming from him. It's too strident."
</p>
<p> By midweek Bush himself was chafing at the Truman approach.
So he sought help from outside advisers, including two key
figures from his 1988 campaign: political adman Roger Ailes and
pollster Robert Teeter. Both men told Bush that his attempts to
hang the budget mess on the Democrats looked defensive and that
he would do better to change the subject. "Let's remind people
that we've got some good things accomplished," a third adviser
recommended. "Talk about the Clean Air Act. Talk about the gulf,
which is more presidential. Above all, be yourself."
</p>
<p> Thus, after vowing to "crisscross the country" savaging
Democrats, Bush ended the week saying he wanted to "finish on
a positive note." He began to talk extensively--and
belligerently--about the Persian Gulf. But that shift hardly
mollified the Democrats; citing the campaign-trail venues for
the President's tough talk on the gulf, they accused him of
using the crisis for Republican advantage. Bush indignantly
denied the charge. Yet two polls released late last week
suggested the new approach might be paying off: Bush's approval
ratings appear to be leveling off in the mid-50s.
</p>
<p> Bush belatedly concluded that after more than five months
of bipartisan budget talks with Congress, he could not credibly
lurch into reverse gear and blame everything on his negotiating
partners. "The Truman approach could be a good one," said one
Republican strategist, "but you have to be consistent about it."
</p>
<p> Consistency has been scarce around the White House lately,
in part because of Bush's tendency to separate "governing" and
"politics." When he works on the gulf crisis or the budget, he
is "governing": he concentrates on cutting private deals and
sees little need to persuade the public to back him. Once the
deals are made, however, Bush can switch to his "politics" mode,
in which he feels free to play fast and loose with the facts.
Bush tells his political audiences, for example, that he needs
more Republicans in Congress so that taxes and spending can be
reduced. Yet in the recent budget battle, House Republicans were
unable to come within $90 billion of Bush's deficit-cutting
targets.
</p>
<p> President Truman understood that governing requires the
constant and effective practice of politics, which he reduced
to one word: persuasion. Truman always worked to persuade the
public, in frank and often funny language. Yet he never feared
to offend voters who might disagree, and he seldom shrank from
admitting the costs and implications of his policies.
</p>
<p> George Bush, in contrast, tries to please everyone all the
time. He takes the popular position that taxes need not rise,
even on the wealthy, if only federal spending is cut--yet he
insists that Congress make the tough choices on whose spending
is cut. His attitude is that the buck stops there. Bush sought
closed-door budget talks with the leaders of Congress precisely
because all sides wished to avoid public debate over such
unpopular measures as the $70 billion cut in Medicare that Bush
secretly proposed. As Senate majority leader George Mitchell
observed, "President Bush is unwilling to advocate publicly the
policies he was pursuing privately."
</p>
<p> When Americans think of Harry Truman, many recall the crowds
in 1948 who urged him to "Give 'em hell." Fewer remember
Truman's response: "I just tell the truth on the opposition--and they think it's hell." Until George Bush does the same, he
will be no Harry Truman.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>